Fantastic video. During his life I never missed a concert whenever he came to town. Granted that there were other trumpet players with good register and jazz playing abilitiy, However none of them led bands of much significance. At least not BIG BANDS. During the Sixties and Seventies we had Stan Kenton, Buddy Rich, Don Ellis, The Duke & the Count. However all of them died in 70's and the 80s. Only Maynard, single handedly and by himself kept live big band music going. We can say that the Big Band era ended on August 23rd, 2006.
seeing these never before seen videos of maynard ferguson inspire many others to become true leagandly players he was a legend and a god that continues to play in heaven RIP
Pamiętam rok 1984, kiedy to wspaniały trębacz, kolega z akademika w Mińsku, dzisiaj solista Narodowej, niestety nie pamiętam nazwiska, przyniósł mi plytę i po raz pierwszy usłyszałem ten utwór, tego genialnego trębacza. Nie mogłem zasnąć!
Seeing how Doc Severinsen has had a more lucrative and longer career and their are other artists that can outperform maynard your statement is purely an opinion
@@MaynardFreek I love Doc but Maynard was hipper than Doc. Doc tried to make up for it with his fashion but in the end Maynard was just a much cooler guy and a more interesting player.
I heard this version of Pagliacci from MF's Primal Scream album before I actually heard the original famous opera back in early high school. I remember first thinking, "Wow, cool song and melody." Of course, Maynard's arrangements and players are always good, not to mention MF's chops. But I always liked the idea of taking a quality tune then adding a great groove that creative musicians can jam to.
Fantastic video. During his life I never missed a concert whenever he came to town.
Granted that there were other trumpet players with good register and jazz playing abilitiy, However none of them led bands of much significance. At least not BIG BANDS. During the Sixties and Seventies we had Stan Kenton, Buddy Rich, Don Ellis, The Duke & the Count. However all of them died in 70's and the 80s. Only Maynard, single handedly and by himself kept live big band music going.
We can say that the Big Band era ended on August 23rd, 2006.
seeing these never before seen videos of maynard ferguson inspire many others to become true leagandly players he was a legend and a god that continues to play in heaven RIP
Can't Thank you Enough for Posting these Incredible, Inspirational, Historical Concerts !!
Pamiętam rok 1984, kiedy to wspaniały trębacz, kolega z akademika w Mińsku, dzisiaj solista Narodowej, niestety nie pamiętam nazwiska, przyniósł mi plytę i po raz pierwszy usłyszałem ten utwór, tego genialnego trębacza. Nie mogłem zasnąć!
Another Incredible and historic video :D Thank You
Love the video, and MF was "ON" as usual. Biff Hannon on keys. Nice job of capturing the feeling of the live concert.
A great piece of jazz history , one that I had no idea was out there, and I'm a huge MF fan !
Excellent
Jet Tone mouthpiece. Everyone wanted one back then.
HIs best line-up, especially to see Mark Colby on tenor sax. And they're on in their kimonos. Very 70s.
Love the dishikis
Randy Purcell in the trombone
Maynard - trumpet icon never matched
Seeing how Doc Severinsen has had a more lucrative and longer career and their are other artists that can outperform maynard your statement is purely an opinion
I love doc but who remembers him? Maynard is remembered and his music played by probably millions worldwide, but Doc’s not so much.
@@MaynardFreek I love Doc but Maynard was hipper than Doc. Doc tried to make up for it with his fashion but in the end Maynard was just a much cooler guy and a more interesting player.
these days a lot of music school people dislike Maynard and I don't know why he was the best showman trumpet player ever
He had that mouthpiece to the right of center
So did Louis Armstrong and Charlie Shavers.
Freakin Maynard!!!
I heard this version of Pagliacci from MF's Primal Scream album before I actually heard the original famous opera back in early high school. I remember first thinking, "Wow, cool song and melody."
Of course, Maynard's arrangements and players are always good, not to mention MF's chops. But I always liked the idea of taking a quality tune then adding a great groove that creative musicians can jam to.
This has to be March 6 or 7, 1977 at the Harlequin Dinner Theater in Atlanta, GA.
I saw him at the fox that year touring behind conquistador album
Stunning! Is the full concert available?
Should be available!
4greatmf where is it available?!?
1:36 Unbelievable keyboard solo!! He sounds like Allan Zavod. Did he play with Maynard in '77?
Trumpets gettin with it
... ... ...AbsolutePerfection!!! 🎺😎 ; TrippleGThenD"PrimalSceam"that IsHeaven" likeCaptainAmeriacaWildingThe Hamner!" ... ... ...in "end~game"Avengers
llove JaZz~man ~🎺😎~
llove Brother brent! 💘
Maynard at his best !
Heh. He pulled a "Don Ellis" by sending some players into the audience.
dig
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1:34 what note is that
The loudest triple B known to man! 😂
@@misterbarney9005 trust me bro i think now Lynn Nicholson has the loudest ones